Sujata "Sue" Sachdeva, the Koss executive convicted of embezzling $34 MILLION, is sentenced to spend 11 years in federal prison.
But not yet.
She'll be spending the holidays with her children, out of the district.
From the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:
The former Koss Corp. executive convicted of embezzling $34 million from the company has been granted permission to travel out of the district to spend the holidays with her children.
Sujata "Sue" Sachdeva was sentenced in November to 11 years in federal prison for her crime, but she remains free on a $50,000 signature bond. Her children have been living with relatives and attending school in the Detroit area for most of the year, and Sachdeva has traveled to see them several times with permission from the court.
Sachdeva, 47, was granted voluntary surrender status by U.S. District Judge Lynn Adelman. In such cases, the convicted person awaits assignment to a prison by the Federal Bureau of Prisons and reports to the prison on a specified date. The lag time between sentencing and reporting to prison for people on voluntary surrender status is six to eight weeks.
Adelman has recommended that Sachdeva be allowed to serve her time at Dublin prison in California, as she requested. The Bureau of Prisons can accept the recommendation or can assign Sachdeva to any prison it deems appropriate.
A conviction for embezzling $34 MILLION won't disrupt Sachdeva's plans for the holidays.
Isn't that nice?
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